After the victory of the Crusaders at the
first Battle of Ramla on 7 September 1101, al-Afdal was ready to strike at the Crusaders once again and dispatched around 20,000 troops under the command of his son
Sharaf al-Ma'ali. King
Baldwin I of Jerusalem was in
Jaffa seeing off survivors of the defeated
Crusade of 1101, when news reached him of the Fatimid invasion force. Duke
William IX of Aquitaine had already departed, but many others such as Counts
Stephen II of Blois and
Stephen I of Burgundy had been forced back due to unfavorable winds and consequently joined Baldwin's force in order to help in the battle. Due to faulty reconnaissance Baldwin severely underestimated the size of the Egyptian army, believing it to be no more than a minor expeditionary force, and on 17 May 1102 he rode to face an army of several thousand with only 200 mounted knights and no infantry. Realizing his error too late and already cut off from escape, Baldwin and his army were charged by the Egyptian forces, and many were quickly slaughtered, although Baldwin and a handful of others managed to barricade themselves in Ramla's single tower. Baldwin was left with no other option than to flee and escaped the tower under the cover of night with just his scribe and a single knight, Hugh of Brulis, who is not mentioned in any source afterwards. Baldwin spent the next two days evading Fatimid search parties until he arrived exhausted, starved, and parched in the reasonably safe haven of
Arsuf on 19 May. The situation of the remaining knights in Ramla deteriorated when Fatimid forces stormed the town on the morning of 18 May, with only the tower remaining under Crusader control. The Fatimids ruthlessly attacked the tower, undermining walls and setting fires to smoke out the desperate defenders. After a day of desperately holding their ground the remaining knights, all but abandoned by their king, decided to launch a suicidal last stand and charged the besiegers. Almost all of the meagre force was immediately slain including Stephen, who finally recovered the honour that he had lost when he deserted the
Siege of Antioch four years previously. However, Conrad, marshal of
Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor, who had previously led a contingent at the Crusade of 1101, fought so valiantly that even after everyone around him was dead he still fought on, holding off the Fatimids to the point that his awestruck foe offered to spare his life if he surrendered. ==Siege of Jaffa and aftermath==